In late November 2012, while Matteo Renzi was making an ill-fated bid for leadership of the Italian centre-left, a young MP from his Democratic Party (PD) piped up on Twitter to remark: “OK, Renzi has quite a lot to learn about foreign policy … He won’t make the pass mark, I fear #thirdgrade.” When he won the PD primaries the following winter, Renzi – canny as ever – hired his sharp-tongued critic as the party’s spokesperson on Europe and international affairs. Once prime minister, he ushered her into the top job at Italy‘s foreign office.

Now, the shoe is firmly on the other foot: it is Federica Mogherini – on her way to Brussels to become Cathy Ashton’s successor in the EU – who, according to her critics, has a lot to learn. And the jury is out on whether the 41-year-old Roman- who has six months’ experience in government as foreign minister, no more and no less – will make the grade. Le Monde, the French daily, last week said her appointment would be “a sad day for Europe”.

To Brussels box-tickers, Mogherini, as a woman and a social democrat, meets two of the chief criteria for the job. But her critics believe she lacks the proper credentials for a role that has always struggled to be as grand in practice as it is on paper. More than a decade younger than Ashton was when she started in 2009, the Italian had her first taste of executive power in late February, when she replaced the highly experienced Emma Bonino, a former European commissioner, in the Farnesina.

In Rome, she was viewed as the archetypal Renzi government minister: fresh-faced, vigorous and, it was hoped, effective. In Brussels, when her name started circulating as a potential new high representative several months later, it was inextricably linked with the suddenly risen star of Italy and the PD, boosted on the international stage by a landslide European election victory in which Renzi emerged as a powerful new force on the centre-left.

Despite her charismatic champion, Mogherini, to many, still lacked clout. But others say that, while her relative youth and lack of high-level experience are undeniable, she has other strengths that could yet see her thrive. “I believe her strong points are not to be underestimated,” said Ettore Greco, director of the Institute for International Affairs in Rome. “She knows how to work hard, how to work in a team; and she has always conducted herself with, I’d say, great composure … I can see her as a mediator. And then there’s her experience, her contacts built up gradually during years of work at relatively high levels … Ever since the start of her political career, she has worked on foreign policy. She is not a political neophyte.”

Born in the Italian capital in 1973, the daughter of a set designer who worked with some of the giants of Italian postwar cinema, Mogherini graduated with a degree in political science from La Sapienza university. Her thesis was on political Islam.

An active member of the Democrats of the Left (DS), a social democratic party containing many former Communists, she soon got noticed, and specialised in foreign affairs, working particularly on ties with the US Democrat party. In 2008, the year after the DS merged with others into the centre-left PD, she was elected as an MP for the first time. In February, aged 40, she became the youngest foreign minister in the history of the Italian republic.

Since her arrival on the national and international stage in February, Mogherini has quietly impressed many with her knowledge and self-assurance, demonstrating, too, that not all Italians’ English is as comic as the premier’s. (Hers is near perfect; she also has fluent French and, according to her online biography, a little Spanish.) She keeps an impressive pace of international visits, all of which she details on her website, BlogMog.it, in the manner, sniped the Berlusconi family newspaper, Il Giornale, of “a teenager confiding” in the pages of her journal.

But these haven’t all gone smoothly. She raised eyebrows in a July dominated by concerns over Russia’s stance on Ukraine, when she visited Kiev and Moscow and invited Vladimir Putin to an economics summit in Milan in October. Soon after, a group of eastern European countries united to try to block her candidacy for the high representative job, which they said was unacceptable due to Rome’s approach to Moscow.

“But I think when she was doing that, she was probably just following her brief from the [Italian] machine,” said a diplomatic source. “This is a question of differences over the tactical and possibly even strategic attitude towards Russia which is Italy’s rather than hers.” Greco said: “On the European stage, she will of course have to take into account a quite different mood and quite different climate where Moscow is concerned and she should not be – one would hope – conditioned by these Italian reflexes.”

On the BlogMog, Mogherini, a married mother of two, says that, as well as reading crime novels and spending time with her family, her big passion is travel: “Anywhere, anytime, and anyhow.” (The Farnesina said she flies economy class “whenever possible”.) Even if question marks remain over her experience and diplomatic clout, on the globe-trotting front, at least, she should be on safe ground.

Share this:

Related

Explore posts in the same categories: Uncategorized

This entry was posted on September 4, 2014 at 2:56 PM and is filed under Uncategorized. You can subscribe via RSS 2.0 feed to this post's comments. You can skip to the end and leave a response. Pinging is currently not allowed.

12 Comments on “EU:s new FM, Federica Mogherinis PhD thesis were on political Islam.”

The problem with this lady is she has a communist past. Will she sell out Israel to the Islamists i Iran? A PhD in Political Islam proves nothing if she herself sympathizes with the Islamist ideology. Someone should look into her thesis!
Le Monde, the French daily, last week said her appointment would be “a sad day for Europe”.

She has been a member of think-tanks such as the Washington, Berlin and Brussels-based German Marshall Fund for the United States, as well as taking part in nuclear disarmament groups, like her predecessor Catherine Ashton..

In December 2013 she joined the National Secretariat of the Democratic Party with responsibility for Europe and International Affairs.
She had already been a member of the Democratic Party’s Secretariat from 2007 to 2008 and again in 2009, with responsibility for Institutional Reform.
Previously, in the Democrats of the Left Party, she was responsible for International Relations, with her remit focusing on relations with the Democrats in America, the Party of European Socialists (PES), the European Social Forum – Global Policy Forum, and peace movements.
In previous years she was a member of the Board of the European Youth Forum, Deputy Chair of the European Community Organisation of Socialist Youth (ECOSY), and a member of the Secretariat of the Youth Forum of the United Nations Food and Agricultural Organisation (FAO). As a member of the “Young Left”, her remit covered education and universities, and foreign affairs.
As a volunteer with the Italian Recreational and Cultural Association (ARCI) in the 1990s, she followed the national and European campaigns against racism and xenophobia (the Council of Europe’s “All different, all equal” and “Nero e non solo!” campaigns).

Wikipedia:
Mogherini attended the Sapienza University of Rome where she studied Political Science graduating with a specialization in Political Philosophy with a final dissertation entitled “relationship between religion and politics in Islam”,[2][3] which she wrote while she was on the Erasmus programme at Aix-en-Provence, France (Sciences Po Aix).